OPINION
	Reviving Agriculture
	
		In what appears to be a desperate move to prop up agriculture growth, Prime 
Minister Manmohan Singh has called for reversing the declining trend in investment in 
agriculture. But his approach may also end up compounding the already existing crisis, writes 
		
		Devinder Sharma.
		
		
  15 November 2006 -
   India is faced with its worst agrarian crisis. It isn't the spate of farmer's 
suicides, on an upswing and still counting that made the Prime Minister Manmohan 
Singh to admit the magnitude of agrarian crisis that prevails. The unforeseen 
slump in agriculture growth rate  slipping between 1 to 2 per cent  in turn 
affected the industrial growth rate, which restricted quantum jumps in the 
national economy made the government to sit back and take notice.
		
		In what appears to be a desperate move to prop up agriculture growth, the Prime 
Minister has called for reversing the declining trend in investment in 
agriculture; and among the measures mentioned stepping up credit flow to 
farmers; talked of creating a 'single market' for agricultural produce and to 
provide the latest technology to farmers.
		
	
		
		
		
		Strikingly similar to the faulty 
Vision 2020 that the former Chief Minister of 
Andhra Pradesh, Chandrababu Naidu, had unsuccessfully applied, and was therefore 
routed out in the last state elections, Prime Minister's approach may also end up
compounding the already existing crisis in farming.
		
		Despite the government's projections the fact remains majority of farmers are 
keen to abandon agriculture and move into the urban centres looking for menial 
jobs. Agricultural lands have become unproductive. There is therefore a 
desperate need to revitalise agriculture, restore the natural resource base and 
provide for sustainable livelihoods. Any development alternative to ensure 
long-term food security has to be linked to sustainable agriculture.
		
		Let me therefore draw the outline of the sustainable farming systems that the 
country needs to focus on. This is the overall framework under which 
location-specific alterations and adaptations need to be tried. What is needed 
is a fresh approach that takes the ground realities into consideration before 
embarking upon any policy imperatives. I am presenting a collection of five of 
the important rational decisions, which would certainly initiate the revival of 
Indian agriculture:  
		
Sustainable farming 
		
Indian agriculture faces an unprecedented crisis in 
sustainability. Foodgrain productivity in the food bowl, comprising Punjab, 
Haryana, and western Uttar Pradesh, is on the decline. The green revolution 
areas are encountering serious bottlenecks to growth and productivity. The 
dryland areas (comprising nearly 70 per cent of the cultivable lands) continue 
to drown in misery and apathy. Excessive mining of soil nutrients and 
groundwater have already brought in soil sickness. Indiscriminate use of 
chemical pesticides has done serious harm to environment, human health and 
ecology.
		
		There is therefore a need to immediately:
		
		a)	Draw a balance sheet of the collapse of Green Revolution. We need to 
know what went wrong with agriculture, so that we don't repeat the same 
mistakes. A post mortem of Green Revolution is absolutely necessary.
		
		b)	
Investments and increased outlays for agricultural research that is based on 
external chemical inputs like fertiliser and pesticides need to be phased out. 
Instead, financial allocation should be made for reviving low-input agriculture, 
which uses cheap and locally available technology and in turn improves 
production, reduces cost of production and protects environment.
		
		
		
	
		
		Pesticides were promoted blindly on rice. The International Rice Research 
		Institute in the Philippines now says that pesticides on rice were a waste 
		of time and effort in Asia.
		
	
		
 
		
			
		c)	Draw a 
map of the soil health of India. In future, all crop introductions should be 
based on soil health. If a crop (including cash crops) has the possibility of 
destroying the soil fertility and thereby accentuating the sustainability 
crisis, that cropping system should not be allowed.
		
		d)	Role of technology too 
needs to be ascertained. Pesticides were promoted blindly on rice, for instance. 
The International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines now says that 
pesticides on rice were a waste of time and effort in Asia. But meanwhile, 
pesticides usage has already taken a huge toll, and pushed farmers in a debt 
trap.
		
		e)	Agricultural research must reorient itself to learn from the 
existing sustainable farming models. The focus of genetically modified crops 
must immediately stop as it is risky and expensive for the farmer. This has been 
amply demonstrated in several parts of the world.
		
		f)	Water productivity and 
efficiency has to be the hallmark of agricultural research based on the local 
conditions. 
		
Dryland farming 
		
Despite former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's emphasis on 
dryland farming, agricultural scientists as well as the policy makers have 
failed the resource-poor farmers. This is essentially because the entire thrust 
of dryland research was to bring in an external model of Green Revolution in 
which the dryland farmer, who manages to survive against all odds, would fit in. 
No effort was made to improve the existing technology base under numerous 
location-technology specifications.
		
		The increased emphasis on water harvesting notwithstanding, the reduced 
availability of water is emerging as a major social and economic crisis. In 
addition, the cropping pattern has to be evolved keeping in mind the water 
availability. At present, more the water requirement for hybrid crop varieties 
more is its cultivation in the water-scarce regions. This is scandalous and 
unless the cropping pattern is rectified no measures to protect and preserve 
water resources will be effective. There is no justification for Rajasthan, for 
instance, to grow sugarcane.
		
		a)	Investments in rainwater harvesting need to be immediately shifted to 
the revival of the traditional forms of water conservation  ponds and tanks.
		
		b)	
Fodder cultivation, crop planning according to the water needs and availability 
and the emphasis on the local breed of cattle (and improving its productivity, 
rather than importing exotic breeds) need to be encouraged. 
c)	Dryland crops 
like coarse cereal, pulses and oilseeds require adequate policy measures that 
bring shine to these forgotten grains. Imports under bilateral trade agreements 
must protect the dryland crops. 
d)	Farmers in the rainfed areas need to be 
insured against drought. This can be ensured by making it mandatory for the 
foreign insurance companies to invest at least 40 per cent of their funds for 
farm insurance.
		
		Pulses are a part of the average diet. Yet, pulse production has remained in the 
range of 14 million tonnes. Pulses are also a crop of the marginal lands, 
requiring less water and replenishing soil nutrients. Strange that the country 
imports pulses and export sugar, whose production needs to brought down. Why 
can't we launch a nationwide programme to increase pulse production by 
re-launching a Technology Mission on Pulses and by providing farmers with small 
processing units to turn it into 'daal'.
		
Farm incomes 
		
Growing indebtedness in agriculture is forcing an increasing 
numbers of farmers to end their lives. This unsavoury phenomenon is a 
manifestation of the declining farm incomes and rising cost of production. No 
wonder, the average monthly income per family stagnates at Rs 2,100, almost 
hovering around the poverty line.
		
		a)	Farm incomes must be raised. There is a need to immediately provide 
farmers with a 'minimum take home' income based on the land holding size. 
Farmers should therefore be included in the 6th pay commission.  
		
b)	Schemes 
that encourage banks to provide easy credit facilities to farmers need to be 
spelled out. Rural women end up paying 24 to 46 per cent percent by way of 
interest even in the much-hyped self-help groups. This is four times the rate of 
interest charged in the urban areas. Farm credit for small farmers should be 
made available for at 4 per cent interest. Cooperative credit must get priority 
over moneylenders. 
		
c)	Banks should be directed not to confiscate the movable 
and immovable property of defaulting farmers. Nor should they be put in prison. 
		
d)	On top of it, agriculture credit has to be extended to sustainable 
farming systems. So far the banks are only providing credit for 
technology-oriented farming systems, which is responsible for the destruction of 
the natural resource base. Farm credit needs to be extended to organic 
agriculture, for which an Organic Bank need to be created by NABARD (like the 
technology credit that goes through the private Robo Bank). 
		
Multiple Cropping 
		
Emphasis on commodities approach during the green revolution 
has encouraged monocultures, loss of biodiversity, encouraged food trade in some 
commodities, distorted domestic markets, and disrupted the micro-nutrient 
availability in soil, plant, animals and for humans. Thrust on farm commodities 
has also pushed in trade activities, encouraged food miles, adding to greenhouse 
emissions, water mining, and destruction of farm incomes. The need is to revert 
back to the time-tested farming systems that relied on mixed cropping and its 
integration with farm animals, thereby meeting the household and community 
nutrition needs from the available farm holdings.
		
		a)	Contract farming can compound the agrarian crisis. Contract farming 
provides the companies to go in for still intensive farming systems thereby 
destroying the soil productivity. 
		
b)	It has been observed that contract 
farming on average is based on 20 per cent more application of chemical inputs 
and ten per cent more mining of ground water. 
		
c)	It is therefore 
important that all contract-farming approvals be based on farm sustainability 
parameters. Contract must specify that the company will return back the land to 
the farmer (which it takes on lease) in the same fertility conditions that 
existing at the time of the contract. 
		
d)	Corporate agriculture must be 
discouraged. All over the world, agribusiness companies have displaced farmers. 
This cannot be allowed in India, which supports 65-crore people on the farm. 
		
e)	
Exotic as well as hybrid seeds should be discouraged. These have been primarily 
responsible for turning the lands sick. The thrust should be on traditional 
seeds.  
		
Marketing 
		
Providing an assured and remunerative market for agricultural 
producers cannot be left to the market forces. The food policy imperatives of 
public distribution system and announcing the procurement prices before the crop 
season have to be further strengthened. Agri-processing too needs to be 
strengthened, but not at the cost of the domestic producers. Food-processing 
sector should be directed to use the abundant raw material available within the 
country.
		
		The 'rainbow' revolution that everyone talks about is actually aimed at helping 
the industry to exploit the farm sector. Already a number of manufacturing 
units, for instance, have begun to source the agricultural raw material, 
including oranges, grapes, popcorn, peas etc, from America and Europe. Domestic 
production in these crops is going waste. Future trading in farm commodities 
must stop. Export-oriented agriculture is dependent upon highly intensive 
farming and should be discouraged. India can create a strong niche in 
international organic market, which is sustainable and economically viable.
		
		Public Distribution System needs to be strengthened and extended to upcoming 
agricultural areas in Bihar, Orissa, West Bengal and the northeast. In addition, 
procurement needs to be extended to coarse cereals, pulses and oilseeds to 
provide farmers an incentive to produce more. The question of rising food 
subsidy bill is misplaced since it is far less than the subsidy doled out to a 
few hundred exporters. Strengthening PDS should also be aimed in such a way that 
it becomes an effective instrument at tackling hunger.
		
		Food procurement operations, linked to the announcement of assured prices for 
agricultural commodities, are the two planks of the 'famine-avoidance' strategy 
that India had adopted and should not be dismantled. Once the government 
withdraws from announcing procurement prices for agricultural commodities, it is 
under no obligation to purchase the surplus that flows into the mandis. Farmers 
would thus be left at the mercy of the trade and the market forces, and if the 
past experience is any indication it simply means rendering the farming 
community vulnerable to exploitation thereby threatening the country's food 
self-sufficiency, so assiduously built over the past three decades.
		
		The biggest crisis afflicting the marketing of farm produce is the inability to 
manage the agricultural surpluses. It is here that the policy planning effort 
has to be redirected with an effort to ensure that the surplus does not become a 
national liability. Farmers have repeatedly and in different parts of the 
country been dumping tomatoes, potatoes and other fruits onto the streets to 
express their frustration at the lack of adequate marketing infrastructure. The 
marketing approach has to be different for the rural and urban areas.
		
		In essence, it is not the growth in agriculture that is of paramount importance. 
What is crucial for the nation is to ensure that every tear in the eyes of the 
food producer  annadata  is wiped away. Only then can the country make the 
process of growth really 'inclusive'. But is anybody listening?